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    1. Peaceless 11 yrs ago

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9 yrs ago
Current Hello, status reader! Yes, you! Have a great day, y'hear!
2 likes
10 yrs ago
I wonder if this place would ever run a proper Play By Post with dice rolls and whatnot.
11 yrs ago
The average life expectancy of RPs here leave something to be desired.
4 likes
11 yrs ago
Ah yes, looking up words in Google Translate. Used an actual paperback dictionary back in the day, but still - looks like I'm back in the saddle.
11 yrs ago
It's not the size of the brain that counts, it's how you wield it

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9.75N/kg

A bird's eye view, so to speak, of the power core of the Vitae was eerily similar to that of the inner chamber of an ant hill. The flows of fuel, electrical power, coolant and information were all neatly stacked in concentric loops around the core by collective years of brilliant engineering, and on top of it all was the flow of people. Tiny dots, clad in the colors of their respective duty or training, busied themselves around epicenters of manual control or moved from one to another, in and out of the huge hangar. Like blood cells in a very complex heart, to use the chief engineer's favorite metaphor, but in a broader sense. Even with the core and the rest of the ship's systems having double and triple contingency mechanisms, humans were the last failsafe. Or perhaps the first?

But unlike blood cells, not all of the engineering corps were the same. Some would stare at a gauge for hours and call out at any deviation, unsure of their next action but absolutely positive of the time it should be taken at. Some teams worked like an organism by itself, while some were only the arms and legs of their team leader. It was all a vast, dynamic dance of clashing rhythms, man versus machine or man with machine together.

It was all a perfect time to have a nervous breakdown.

9.751N/kg

There was a simpler time, before. A time when all objectives were clear, when the main challenge had a name and a proverbial face. Before the farce that was Project Genesis. Before humanity has collectively given up, like a pitiful kind of sea cucumber that sacrifices 90% of its body to avoid a predator, while completely missing the irony of it all. Before that, there were people who actually wanted to win, to use whatever percent of their body and booby-trap it to make the predator choke on their own innards.

The reactor's power diversion mechanisms were prepped for quick transfers and abrupt rebalancing. It was a strenuous, delicate process that took over half of the on-duty engineering team to supervise and manage. Despite the ship AI's ever-watchful eye, no engineer in their right mind would let a machine decide for itself whether it is healthy. And rightfully so - some of the automated coupling relays were slightly damaged from the liftoff, which was only slightly more violent than planned, and of course there was no time for maintenance before the excrement collided with the ventilator and the Vitae entered high alert. No rest for the wicked and all. This was a great chance to thank whoever thought it was a good idea to put actual people in engineering.

9.788N/kg


A lone technician was leaning against the wall near an out-of-the-way terminal of one of the coolant conductor channels. They were clad in a standard-issue full body hazmat suit meant to dealt with the dangers of handling coolant. Even under the suit, they were visibly shivering, a wrench clenched in their gloved hands like a drowning man's lifeline. A colorful chart from an adjacent monitor flashed at their full-face mask, the readings indicating a gradual increase in pressure that would require manual handling to prevent damage to the conductor pipes. That section of the power core bay was largely empty since one of the more talented technicians managed to tap into the security feed and get a picture of the battle outside the ship, and of course most of the staff huddled around him. They knew it was a matter of seconds before Noah detects this and cuts them off, so every moment counted. Various slurs along the lines of 'Fuck' were dominating verbal communication.

"You!" a bark made the helmeted technician turn. "What the hell are you doing? Can't you see the gauges?!" An officer rushed towards the monitor, half a second before the gauge spiked into the red zone. There was a painful creak and a high-pitched hiss that followed, known as the "devil's song" by the coolant section. But the barking officer found herself on her back, behind an adjacent pipe. The hiss died down a moment later, and she raised her head to find an apprehensive technician from a different section pushing a button on the monitor with a long tool from a safe spot, while the hazmat seemed to... cover the coolant leak with their body?

"Who - Who the hell are you?" acting chief engineer, Lt. Rorq, couldn't decide what she was seeing. The protective hazmat suit had a gaping hole in the middle, where the coolant steam hit the technician that blocked it with their body. Steaming fluid leaked down a metallic armor that wasn't in any standard issue package she knew of. The still helmeted figure stumbled backwards and sat against the slightly fractured pipe.

"The gravity here is wrong."

"What?"

A black clawed hand with the remains of a glove attached reached up and removed the cyllindrical helmet. The most heavily augmented face in the entirety of the Vitae's staff looked back at the officer. "Specialist Mai Irons, Coolant Section, Ma'am." On top of her heavy accent, the woman's voice sounded as if coming from a long metal pipe. "Sorry, still getting used to being in space."

A wrench was laying near the specialist's feet. It was crooked and indented with finger marks.
Blargh!

I actually managed to read through all the IC!

First I gotta say yaall are great writers, and if I weren't under pressure to finish reading so I could join I could definitely enjoy it as a novel.

Second, most of the stories are of high-ranking officials, which made me regret my character concept a little, but on the other hand there's the whole Michael/Karen thing that breathes an entirely new kind of life to the story. So I'll probably be fine.

Gonna post soon. Prepare yourselves, mwahaha.
@LegionPothIX

@Sep is correct, it is definitely a cover. Maintenance crew is the easiest way to blend into a ship Chizuru doesn't actually want to take down. If Xaith knows all maintenance crew by heart he will find her out fairly easily, but hiding indefinitely was never the plan. It was an impulsive "board first, ask questions later" thing.

You may all wait for my first IC before deciding retrospectively about the whole boarding thing. I'd've done it today but it's been kind of a crazy weekend and I'm glad I at least managed to get a sheet in before getting pounced by chores and mandatory socializing and whatnot.
@Peaceless

Love the character concept! She could go in many different directions I suppose too.

Also, the "super soldier" project was most likely known to my character (Gavon) from his past experience running with questionable fanatical groups, as I just assumed once the project was scrapped, that it's assets somehow ended up on the black market. Although he also has strong feelings against such "bastardized" technology, so their eventually interactions should be interesting...

Anyway, some great backstory ideas floating around in my head...but welcome to the RP! :)


I assume that around the initialization of the Genesis Project there was some data leak between the various factions. Since such a project could also be used against opposed factions, I assume the NC would keep it a secret as much as they could. What I'm saying is it's very probable Gavon would know about this project, but he would not get this info from standard channels.

You are free to use one of the "other" surviving Daedalus subjects that I purposefully left as hooks as your source. Do bear in mind that none of them would be allowed on the Vitae via normal means.
Reporting in.

Thanks for the template, @LegionPothIX.

Now to figure out how to join the IC...
The simulation was weird. The ability to perceive the world both from a first-person view and some kind of isometric overview made the Will-Worm dizzy for a while, his floating arms laying flat on the ground in front of his feet-body-tail-whatever. He was surprised how fast it became natural, though. Despite the "stage" being empty, he managed to measure and throw some trick shots with a toy-like bright green hand grenade that felt so familiar in his hand. Yeah, he could handle this. He checked what other weapons he had access to and found only the basic ones were unlocked. Eh. To be honest, that's all any pro player ever needed.

When Will emerged from the simulated space, half of the group were already past the strange light portal that PODONOK (yeah, cyka) summoned. A sudden gust of cold wind made him shiver and back away, the view of the desolate, colorless landscape in front of them chilling him in more ways than one. He knew this game. Oh yes. It was a game that required much timing and skill. That he could respect. It also required much, much dying.

One would say dying was an integral part of the game.

I wonder how permanent our death is here, he thought aloud, but the only sound that came from somewhere in his form was OI NUTTER. He tried to summon one of those grenades, but the only thing that appeared is a weird pixelated inventory with badly drawn equipment. A quick look around the new options made him understand he wasn't completely lost.

COME ON, THEN A small but painfully bright flame appeared inside Will's right floating fist. He tossed the fireball lightly into the air and caught it. Yeah. This could work.
Eventually, gradually, with excruciating slowness, a large form unfolded in the middle of the now empty goblin nest. The form, which may have been three or four goblin babies, was in fact a single specimen. He scratched his chest idly, his wide tongue wetting his lips, while his gaze lazily searched for the other children, most of which huddled around him for warmth the night before. A not entirely unpleasant pain shot through his eyes when he looked at the daylight creeping in from outside - it was time to move, to live, and every muscle and nerve in his body ached to be used.

He looked at his feet, and found between them and his gut a small piece of cloth tied with a loose string around his waist. He was strangely proud of this thing, his first invention, solving some strange unspoken need he had to have something over his privates. But the day, ah yes, it had so much more opportunity -

ROOOARRRRRRRRRRGHHH


The sudden loud noise sent the goblin named Klump scampering to a corner of the cave. Trying to push as much of himself as he could into the shadow, his eyes darted all over the cave, searching for the hidden assailant. But other than Gobbie, who didn't seem worried at all, and a few sleeping children, he was alone.

The roar came back, as loud as before, with a strange deep pain in Klump's gut. He slapped his forehead - he was hungry is all! And it was high time to do something about it.

With a careful waddle, Klump emerged from the cave mouth. It was his first time, and he met a plethora of new visual experiences. Which he had the intention of turning into culinary ones. He pulled a large, teardrop shaped leaf from a nearby brush and carefully tasted it. It had a strong, bitter taste, with a slight grassy tang. Filing it away under his loincloth, he proceeded to taste all the plants in his vicinity in search for one nutritious and tasty.
Very well. We shall see how it goes, and if I cannot keep up I will regretfully drop out.
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